The AI Revolution is Validating 40 Years of Perl Philosophy
The tech world is experiencing an identity crisis. Pundits are shouting from the digital rooftops that traditional coding is over, replaced by natural human language interfaces. They're calling it a radical new paradigm.
But if you've been paying attention to Perl since 1987, you know this isn't a revolution--it's a homecoming.
When Larry Wall created Perl, he didn't just build a language to sit closer to the metal; he built it to sit closer to speech. While computer science worshiped at the altar of rigid mathematical purism, Perl introduced a context-aware structure built on nouns, verbs, singulars, and plurals.
Today, Large Language Models operate entirely on probability, semantics, and context. We've spent decades forcing humans to think like transistors; now, we've successfully forced silicon to learn human.
Perl programmers are uniquely wired for this future. We've spent forty years treating programming as an exercise in linguistics and context.
The community isn't fading into the past; it's providing the blueprint for what's next. Case in point: The Public Enrichment and Robotics Laboratories (RoboPerl) are currently engineering PerlGPT--a model trained specifically to understand best practices, architectures, and the nuanced wisdom of "Perl poets."
The future of engineering belongs to those who can speak fluent intent.
👉 Watch Randal's full talk on how structural context is dominating the modern landscape: https://youtu.be/hAd6MHXrdh4
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